The Spectator, Zväzok 2C. Whittingham Dean Str. ... 1803., 1803 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 58.
Strana 8
... keep up a farce of retinue and grandeur within his own house , shall shrink at the expectation of surly demands at his doors . The debtor is the creditor's criminal , and all the officers of power and state , whom we be- hold make so ...
... keep up a farce of retinue and grandeur within his own house , shall shrink at the expectation of surly demands at his doors . The debtor is the creditor's criminal , and all the officers of power and state , whom we be- hold make so ...
Strana 9
... keep a public table , or feed dogs , like a worthy English gentleman , till he has out - run half his estate , and leave the same incumbrance upon his first - born , and so on ; till one man of more vigour than ordinary goes quite ...
... keep a public table , or feed dogs , like a worthy English gentleman , till he has out - run half his estate , and leave the same incumbrance upon his first - born , and so on ; till one man of more vigour than ordinary goes quite ...
Strana 31
... keeps the students at her house when they should be at study . It would be worth your while to see how the idolaters alternately offer incense to 4 This Idol was a young widow who kept the Widow's coffee - house ( then so called ) in ...
... keeps the students at her house when they should be at study . It would be worth your while to see how the idolaters alternately offer incense to 4 This Idol was a young widow who kept the Widow's coffee - house ( then so called ) in ...
Strana 35
... keep equipages . It is a common humour among the retinue of people of quality , when they are in their revels , that is when they are out of their masters ' sight , to assume in a humorous way the names and titles of those whose ...
... keep equipages . It is a common humour among the retinue of people of quality , when they are in their revels , that is when they are out of their masters ' sight , to assume in a humorous way the names and titles of those whose ...
Strana 48
... keep no measures with them as soon as I was at li- berty ; but upon asking my old woman what was become of the two ladies , she told me she believed they were by that time within sight of Paris , for that they went away in a coach and ...
... keep no measures with them as soon as I was at li- berty ; but upon asking my old woman what was become of the two ladies , she told me she believed they were by that time within sight of Paris , for that they went away in a coach and ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
acquainted ADDISON admirers agreeable appear beauty behaviour body character coffee-house Constantia conversation creature daugh discourse dress DRYDEN endeavour entertain Epig Eucrate Eudoxus eyes fair sex familiar spirit father favour fortune friend Sir Roger genius gentleman give Glaphyra Great-Britain happy hear heard heart honest honour human humble servant humour impertinent John Sharpe kind knight lady Laertes learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage master mind nature neral never obliged observe occasion ordinary paper particular pass passion person Pharamond Pindar Plato Platonic love pleased pleasure present reader reason ribaldry sense shew sorrow soul speak SPECTATOR STEELE tell temper thee Theodosius thing thou thought tion told Tom Short town VIRG virtue whig whole woman women words write young youth